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    <title>Daily quote by Mongol invasions and conquests</title>
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<title>2026-04-07</title>
<link>https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mongol_invasions_and_conquests?t=2026-04-07</link>
<description><![CDATA[<li>Kolya believed that <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_invasions_and_conquests" class="extiw" title="w:Mongol invasions and conquests">the Mongols’ expansion</a> was pathological. It was a ghastly spiral of positive feedback, born of <a href="/wiki/Genghis_Khan" title="Genghis Khan">Genghis Khan</a>’s unquestioned military genius and fueled by easy conquests, a plague of <a href="/wiki/Insanity" title="Insanity">insanity</a> and <a href="/wiki/Destruction" title="Destruction">destruction</a> that had spread across most of the known world.
<ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_C._Clarke" title="Arthur C. Clarke">Arthur C. Clarke</a> and <a href="/wiki/Stephen_Baxter" title="Stephen Baxter">Stephen Baxter</a>, <i>Time's Eye</i> (2003), Chapter 35 (p. 289 in the mass market paperback edition, <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-345-45247-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-345-45247-X">ISBN 0-345-45247-X</a>)</li></ul></li>
<li>Although time was running out for horse-borne warriors, they remained formidable in the right circumstances. In the thirteenth century <a href="/wiki/Genghis_Khan" title="Genghis Khan">Genghis Khan</a> welded quarrelling Mongol tribes together into a highly centralised state which proved, for a time, to be an unstoppable military force, sweeping away regimes in <a href="/wiki/China" title="China">China</a> and <a href="/wiki/Iran" title="Iran">Persia</a>. Mongol warriors were highly mobile and, when they were challenged by forces from more settled empires, withdrew into the vast spaces of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Asia" class="extiw" title="w:Central Asia">Central Asia</a>. One of the secrets of their success may have been another simple piece of technology like the stirrup. Mongol warriors wore silk undershirts, so that if they were hit by an arrow the silk wrapped around its head. It was not only easier to get the arrow out; the risk of infection, until the modern age a greater killer of soldiers than death in battle, was much less. Under Genghis’s successors his warriors stormed westwards through Central Asia and <a href="/wiki/Russia" title="Russia">Russia</a> to the shores of the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea" class="extiw" title="w:Black Sea">Black Sea</a>, carrying all before them and leaving a trail of death and ruin. No force could stand against them and by 1241 they were probing into <a href="/wiki/Hungary" title="Hungary">Hungary</a>, <a href="/wiki/Poland" title="Poland">Poland</a> and present-day <a href="/wiki/Romania" title="Romania">Romania</a> and <a href="/wiki/Austria" title="Austria">Austria</a>. It looked as though much of what was a weak and divided Europe would become part of their empire – and think what a different history it would have had – when the Mongols suddenly stopped and withdrew in 1242. It may be because word had come that, thousands of miles to the east, the Great Khan had died, but historians have recently speculated that poor weather had turned the ground marshy and ruined the fodder for the Mongol horses.
<ul><li><a href="/wiki/Margaret_MacMillan" title="Margaret MacMillan">Margaret MacMillan</a>, <i>War: How Conflict Shaped Us</i> (2020)</li></ul></li>
<li>Some commentators find it difficult to classify the Mongol killing as <a href="/wiki/Genocide" title="Genocide">genocide</a>, despite its widespread and frequent occurrence. Yet the Mongols often meticulously planned their campaigns against their enemies with the clear goal of eliminating all or part of the targeted population. The Mongols wiped out en masse those groups that resisted them, even to the point of returning to destroyed cities and towns that they had targeted to finish off the survivors. True, no single group or ethnicity was identified by the Mongols for elimination. In fact, no group was exempt, though craftsmen, artisans, <a href="/wiki/Merchant" title="Merchant">merchants</a>, and builders often found a home with the Mongols. Peoples like the <a href="/wiki/Hungary" title="Hungary">Hungarians</a>, the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khwarezmian_Empire" class="extiw" title="w:Khwarezmian Empire">Khwarezmians</a>, and the <a href="/wiki/China" title="China">Chinese</a> were attacked with a genocidal fury that seriously reduced large population groups to fractions of their previous numbers. The attempt was to destroy the groups “as such.” Unlike the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crusades" class="extiw" title="w:Crusades">Crusaders</a>, the Mongols were not motivated by an <a href="/wiki/Ideology" title="Ideology">ideology</a> that justified destruction. Instead, killing was a method of empire building, a way to expand their territory, terrorize their opponents, and incorporate a wide variety of peoples and cultures into a vast territory stretching at some points from the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediterranean_Sea" class="extiw" title="w:Mediterranean Sea">Mediterranean</a> to the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Ocean" class="extiw" title="w:Pacific Ocean">Pacific</a>. Mass killing, in some cases genocide, needed no justification. It was a fact of Mongol power and rule.
<ul><li><a href="/wiki/Norman_Naimark" title="Norman Naimark">Norman M. Naimark</a>, <i>Genocide: A World History</i>, Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2016.</li></ul></li>]]></description>
<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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